The Miles Davis Quartet - 1955 - The Musings of Miles
(35:35; Craft Recordings [2025 Edition] )
I have literally only just reviewed this as part of the ‘55’ triple CD set, and here it is again, but one can really never have too much of this great album. Plus, unlike the ‘55’ set, this remastered reissue has the songs in the right order this time. Recorded on June 7th 1955, this finds Miles joined by Red Garland (piano), Oscar Pettiford (bass) and Philly Joe Jones (drums). There is such incredible purity, life and emotion in Miles’s playing that I know I would recognise his playing anywhere, but like any good leader he does not hog the limelight but instead makes sure there is plenty of room for the others to shine, with the rhythm section being incredibly busy while Red provides support or awaits his time to take over on the solo. Just six songs, 35 minutes of brilliance.
This has long been a favourite album of mine, as Miles is a true bandleader here, taking his band through the material in a way when sometimes he spends a long time just listening and not playing himself, allowing the rhythm section to just keep it together and for Red to demonstrate his highly melodic and fluid piano. Red worked with Miles for three years, and this is right at the beginning of that relationship. This is jazz which flies, is vibrant, and has lost none of its vitality in the last 70 years and is still as essential today as it was when it recorded.
Kev Rowland, November 2025
Links:
https://www.milesdavis.com/
https://craftrecordings.com/

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